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Tag: Judaism

  • The Right-Wing Nonprofit Serving A.I. Slop for America’s Birthday

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    PragerU is also supplying the multimedia content for the Freedom Truck Mobile Museums, a travelling exhibition of touch-screen displays, Revolutionary War artifacts, and A.I. slop that will chug across the country on tractor-trailers throughout 2026, in celebration of the two-hundred-and-fiftieth anniversary of the Declaration of Independence. It seems that the battle over who defines good and evil—or, at least, over who defines American history—will be waged, in part, from the helm of an eighteen-wheeler.

    Prager, who is seventy-seven, is an observant Jew who sees evangelical Christians as natural allies in his pursuit of “transforming America into a faith-based nation,” as he once wrote. (He has also lamented what he termed Jewish “bigotry” toward evangelical Christians, whose “support, and often even love, of the Jewish people and Israel is the most unrequited love I have ever seen on a large scale.”) In 2009, decades into a successful career in conservative talk radio, he co-founded PragerU, in order to provide what he called a “free alternative to the dominant left-wing ideology in culture, media, and education.” PragerU has received major funding from hard-right benefactors, including Betsy DeVos’s family foundation and the billionaire fracking brothers Dan and Farris Wilks. According to its most recent tax filing—which describes PragerU’s purpose as “marketing and producing educational content for all ages, 4-104, with a focus on a pro-American, Judeo-Christian message”—it received more than sixty-six million dollars in donations in 2024. (In November of that year, Prager sustained a severe spinal-cord injury in a fall that left him paralyzed below the shoulders; he has since resumed making video content for the PragerU website, and composed part of “If There Is No God” by dictation.)

    Prager’s nonprofit is just one of dozens of conservative organizations, many of them Christian, that are named as “partners” in the America 250 Civics Education Coalition, which is overseen by Linda McMahon, the Education Secretary. The coalition has the secular task of developing programming for America’s birthday, such as PragerU’s Founders Museum and the Freedom Trucks, the latter of which received a fourteen-million-dollar grant from the federal Institute of Museum and Library Services. (In March, President Trump signed executive orders to dismantle both the I.M.L.S. and the D.O.E.; they remain alive, albeit in shrunken, ideologized versions of their former selves.) Other America 250 partners include both of the major pro-Trump think tanks (the America First Policy Institute and the Heritage Foundation), a Christian liberal-arts school (Hillsdale College), the Supreme Court’s favorite conservative-Christian legal-advocacy group (the Alliance Defending Freedom), the Christian-right-aligned church of Charlie Kirk (Turning Point USA), and something called Priests for Life.

    According to a D.O.E. press release, the America 250 coalition is “dedicated to renewing patriotism, strengthening civic knowledge, and advancing a shared understanding of America’s founding principles in schools across the nation.” Of course, one of America’s founding principles, taught in every civics class, is the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment, which might seem to frown on the knitting together of so many religious organizations and public funds intended to advance civic education.

    “Real patriotic education,” McMahon said, at the opening of the Founders Museum last year, “means that, just as our founders loved and honored America, so we should honor them, while deeply learning and earnestly debating, still, their ideas.” One way to take McMahon up on this challenge is to deeply learn what James Madison wrote, in 1785, after a bill arose in Virginia’s General Assembly to establish a taxpayer provision for “Teachers of the Christian Religion.” In a petition to his colleagues in the Assembly, Madison asked, “Who does not see that the same authority which can establish Christianity, in exclusion of all other Religions, may establish with the same ease any particular sect of Christians, in exclusion of all other Sects?” He abhorred the proposal as “a melancholy mark” of “sudden degeneracy.” “Instead of holding forth an Asylum to the persecuted,” he wrote, “it is itself a signal of persecution.” A governing body that would permit such an incursion on the free exercise of religion was one that “may sweep away all our fundamental rights,” Madison warned. The bill died.

    Although PragerU has won fans at the highest levels of federal and state government, its educational content and short-form videos are reviled across many chambers of the internet, where the Prager name—attached to videos with titles such as “DEI Must Die,” “Preferred Pronouns or Prison,” “Multiculturalism: A Bad Idea,” and “Is Fascism Right or Left?”—has become synonymous with MAGA-brand disinformation. (PragerU claims that its videos receive tens of millions of views per quarter, but these metrics have not been independently verified.) A PragerU Kids video called “How to Think Objectively,” which was reportedly shown in Houston public schools, provides the thinnest façade for a lesson in climate-change denial. Democratic socialism and, especially, immigration are scourges of the Prager-verse, which has attempted to undermine the constitutional provision of birthright citizenship and cranked out endless pro-ICE videos since the Department of Homeland Security began its violent occupations of Minneapolis and other major U.S. cities.

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    Jessica Winter

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  • Louisiana court allows Ten Commandments posters in public classrooms

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    BATON ROUGE, Louisiana: Public classrooms in the state can now display posters of the Ten Commandments after a U.S. appeals court cleared the way for a Louisiana law that a lower court had earlier blocked.

    The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals voted 12-6 to lift a block that a lower court first placed on the law in 2024. The court said on February 20 that it was too early to make a judgment call on the law’s constitutionality.

    The majority of judges said it is not yet clear how schools will show the religious text. They do not know how visible it will be, whether teachers will discuss the Ten Commandments in class, or whether other historical documents, such as the Mayflower Compact or the Declaration of Independence, will also be displayed.

    Because these details are missing, the judges said they do not have enough facts to decide if the law breaks the First Amendment. In other words, they said there isn’t enough clear information for a proper legal decision, so they’re not just guessing.

    However, six judges disagreed and wrote separate opinions. Some said the court should review the case now. Others said the law forces children to see government-supported religion in a place they are required to attend, which they believe clearly goes against the Constitution.

    Judge James L. Dennis wrote that the law is precisely the kind of government support for religion that the Constitution’s framers sought to prevent.

    This ruling followed the full court’s January hearing. Earlier, a three-judge panel had ruled that Louisiana’s similar law was unconstitutional. Arkansas also has a similar law that is being challenged in federal court.

    Texas’ law began on September 1. It is the biggest effort in the country to put the Ten Commandments in public schools. In some cases, federal judges temporarily stopped school districts from posting them. But in many classrooms across Texas, the posters have already been put up, either paid for by the districts or through donations.

    These laws are part of efforts by Republicans, including President Donald Trump, to bring religion into public school classrooms. Critics say this breaks the rule separating church and state. Supporters argue that the Ten Commandments are an important historical document and a foundational part of U.S. law.

    Families from different religions — including Christianity, Judaism, and Hinduism — as well as clergy members and nonreligious families, have challenged the laws.

    In 1980, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a similar law in Kentucky violated the Constitution’s Establishment Clause, which bars the government from establishing or supporting a religion. The court said the law had no nonreligious purpose and was clearly religious.

    In 2005, the Supreme Court again ruled that Ten Commandments displays in two Kentucky courthouses were unconstitutional. However, in the same year, the court allowed a Ten Commandments monument to remain on the grounds of the Texas state Capitol in Austin.

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  • Mississippi synagogue congregant shares story of 1967 Ku Klux Klan bombing

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    JACKSON, Miss. — Beverly Geiger Bonnheim was 17 when the Ku Klux Klan bombed her synagogue in 1967. This weekend, at 75, she watched it burn again.

    “It was horrifying and disbelieving to see it again,” Geiger Bonnheim said. “Does history change?”

    The historic Beth Israel Congregation, the only synagogue in Jackson, was set ablaze shortly after 3 a.m. on Saturday.

    The fire badly damaged the 165-year-old synagogue’s library and administrative offices. Two Torahs — the sacred scrolls with the text of the first five books of the Hebrew Bible — were destroyed, and five others were being assessed for smoke damage.

    Stephen Pittman, 19, confessed to lighting a fire inside the building, which he referred to as “the synagogue of Satan,” according to an FBI affidavit filed in U.S. District Court in Mississippi on Monday.

    He was charged with maliciously damaging or destroying a building by means of fire or an explosive. He is also facing a similar state charge of first-degree arson of a place of worship.

    Neither of the two public defenders representing Pittman have addressed the charges, nor have they returned The Associated Press’ requests for comment.

    Geiger Bonnheim, who now lives in Dallas, remains an active member of the congregation. She is also on the board of the Goldring/Woldenberg Institute of Southern Jewish Life, a nonprofit that celebrates Jewish life in the South and is based out of the Beth Israel Congregation building.

    She recalls visiting the synagogue with her father the night it was bombed in 1967, calling the sight horrific. At the time, her father was vice president of the congregation, which had just moved into the building, she said.

    “There’s a Hebrew saying, ‘l’dor v’dor,’ from generation to generation,” she said. “The 1967 (bombing) and dealing with the Klan, that was my generation’s and my parent’s generation’s dealing with bigotry and hatred. Unfortunately now it’s this generation’s time to have to deal with those very issues.”

    Geiger Bonnheim said the news of the arson was depressing but not surprising. Jewish people have been persecuted for more than 3,000 years, she said.

    Benjamin Russell, the spiritual leader of Beth Israel Congregation who is going to school to become a Rabi, said recovering from hardship is part of the Jewish psyche. He said the Torah is filled with examples of people being reborn through hardship.

    “From the ashes, something beautiful will rise,” Russell said.

    Zach Shemper, the congregation’s president, has vowed to rebuild. Already, nearby churches are opening their doors, offering to let the congregation worship inside. Other synagogues have offered the Beth Israel Congregation new Torahs.

    The fire has not interrupted the congregation’s programs, and they plan to gather Friday night to observe Shabbat, a weekly day of rest.

    “We’re still here, and we’re not going anywhere,” Shemper said.

    While the congregation has shown resilience, their anger and sadness is palpable.

    Abram Orlansky, a congregant and former Beth Israel Congregation president, broke down when he thought about his two children and the role the synagogue plays in their lives.

    “We told our kids the truth — that someone did this on purpose, and it’s because they don’t like the Jewish people,” he said.

    At the same time, Orlansky said seeing the outpouring of support from the Jackson community and the worldwide Jewish community has been heartening, and his kids are excited to be a part of showing the world that their community isn’t going anywhere.

    ___

    LaFleur contributed to this report from Dallas, Texas.

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  • Mississippi synagogue arson suspect said

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    The suspect charged with setting a fire inside a historic Jackson, Mississippi, synagogue over the weekend admitted it was because of the building’s “Jewish ties,” according to an FBI criminal complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Mississippi on Monday. 

    Security footage showed the arson suspect, Stephen Spencer Pittman, inside Beth Israel Congregation around 3 a.m. on Saturday, pouring what appeared to be gasoline, according to the complaint. Pittman was charged with maliciously damaging or destroying a building by means of fire or an explosive. 

    Authorities said Pittman’s father reached out to the FBI, saying his son confessed to starting the fire, which was later corroborated by map data from a location-sharing app Pittman had on his phone. Pittman also texted his father a photo of the back of the synagogue, writing, “There’s a furnace in the back,” the complaint alleges, noting that his father “pleaded for his son to return home.”

    Hours later, Pittman’s father confronted his son after noticing burns on his ankles. Pittman “laughed as he told his father what he did and said he finally got them,” the complaint said. 

    Damage from a fire that investigators say was arson at  Beth Israel Congregation in Jackson, Mississippi, Jan. 11, 2026.

    Beth Israel Congregation


    That evening, investigators at the Jackson Fire Department and Hinds County Sheriff’s Office interviewed Pittman, who admitted to starting the fire and called the building “the synagogue of Satan,” according to the complaint. He told investigators he stopped to purchase gasoline, removed his license plate and broke into the building through a window with an axe, using a torch lighter to start the fire after pouring gasoline.

    “As we learned that it was arson, the anger really comes to the top of what your mind thinks,” Beth Israel congregation president Zach Shemper told CBS News on Monday.

    Jackson Mayor John Horhn condemned “acts of antisemitism, racism, and religious hatred,” which he said will be treated as acts of terror against residents.

    “Targeting people because of their faith, race, ethnicity, or sexual orientation is morally wrong, un-American, and completely incompatible with the values of this city,” he said in a statement posted to social media on Sunday.

    Beth Israel, established over 160 years ago, is Jackson’s only synagogue and was the first synagogue in the state. 

    “We are grateful that he was apprehended so quickly and he appears to have admitted to committing this heinous act out of hatred for the Jewish people,” Beth Israel said Monday following the release of the criminal complaint. “This news puts a face and name to this tragedy, but does not change our resolve to proudly – even defiantly – continue Jewish life in Jackson in the face of hatred.”

    In 1967, Beth Israel was bombed by Ku Klux Klan members. Two months later, they bombed the home of the congregation’s rabbi as well, according to the Beth Israel website. The rabbi wasn’t home at the time and no one was hurt in the bombings. 

    There are still congregants at the synagogue who were members during those bombings, according to a representative for Beth Israel.

    US Mississippi Synagogue Fire

    A note attached to a bundle of flowers left outside the Beth Israel Congregation reads, I am so very sorry,” on Monday, Jan. 12, 2026, in Jackson, Miss.

    Sophie Bates / AP


    Parts of the building are damaged by water, smoke and soot. The sanctuary, where worship services are held, needs restoration but is still standing. Five Torahs — the sacred scrolls with the text of the first five books of the Hebrew Bible — located inside the sanctuary were assessed for damage. Two Torahs inside the library were destroyed. One Torah rescued during the Holocaust and kept behind glass was undamaged. 

    The attack on Beth Israel comes amid a nationwide spike in antisemitism. There’s been an 893% increase over the past decade in antisemitic incidents, according to the Anti-Defamation League. A 2024 audit by ADL recorded more than  9,000 incidents – it’s the highest number recorded since the organization began tracking antisemitic incidents in 1980.

    “We are still assessing the damage to the building, but will be continuing our worship services and other programs – locations to be determined,” Shemper said in an earlier statement to CBS News, adding that several churches have offered their spaces for worship.

    “We are a resilient people. With support from our community, we will rebuild,” Shemper said.

    Patrick Torphy contributed to this report.

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  • Australia PM Albanese Recalls Parliament Early in Wake of Bondi Attack

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    SYDNEY, ‌Jan ​12 (Reuters) – ‌Australia Prime ​Minister ‍Anthony ​Albanese ​said on ⁠Monday that Parliament ‌would be ​recalled ‌early ‍to sit next ⁠week ​in the wake of the Bondi attack.

    (Reporting by Christine Chen ​in Sydney; Editing by ​Tom Hogue)

    Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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    Reuters

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  • Australia announces gun buyback plans less than a week after Bondi Beach shooting

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    Sydney — Australia will use a sweeping buyback scheme to “get guns off our streets,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Friday, showing his government was keen to take quick action less than a week after a terrorist attack left 15 people dead at a Jewish holiday gathering on Sydney’s famed Bondi Beach.

    Sajid Akram and his son Naveed are accused of opening fire on the festival, which was organized to mark the first day of Hanukkah on Sunday, in what was one of Australia’s deadliest mass shootings.

    Just hours after the attack, Albanese vowed to toughen national gun laws that allowed 50-year-old Sajid to own six high-powered rifles.

    “There is no reason someone living in the suburbs of Sydney needed this many guns,” he said.

    Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Australian Federal Police Commissioner Krissy Barrett are seen on Dec. 19, 2025, in Canberra, Australia, during a news conference in the wake of the Bondi Beach terrorist attack.

    Hilary Wardhaugh/Getty


    Australia would pay gun owners to surrender “surplus, newly banned and illegal firearms.”

    Albanese said Monday that his government was “prepared to take whatever action is necessary. Included in that is the need for tougher gun laws.” He specifically suggested measures that could limit the number of guns a licensed owner can obtain, and mandating a review process for existing licenses.

    The prime minister said the federal government would evenly split the cost of the buyback program with Australia’s state and territorial administrations, with further details to be worked out when lawmakers return to work next week.

    Investigation continues as Sydney remains on high alert

    Sajid Akram, 50, was killed in a gunfight with police, but his 24-year-old son Naveed survived. The unemployed bricklayer was charged earlier this week with 15 counts of murder, an act of terrorism, and dozens of other serious crimes after waking up from a coma in a Sydney hospital.

    Albanese said the attack was inspired by ISIS ideology, and Australian police are still investigating whether the pair may have met with Islamist extremists during a visit to the Philippines just a couple weeks before the shooting.

    They spent most of November in the south of the Asian nation, in a hotel in Davao City. A hotel employee told CBS News on Thursday that the father and son extended their stay week by week and paid in cash, and that they would go out during the day but return to the hotel every night, often bringing food back to eat in their room.

    He said staff noticed nothing particularly suspicious about the men during their nearly monthlong stay.

    Scenes From Davao Where Bondi Shooting Suspects Travelled In November

    A view of the GV Hotel, where Sajid and Naveed Akram, suspects in the Bondi Beach terror attack, stayed in November, as seen on Dec. 18, 2025, in Davao City, in the southern Philippines.

    Ezra Acayan/Getty


    Sydney, meanwhile, remains on high alert almost a week after the shootings.

    Armed police released seven men from custody on Friday, a day after detaining them on a tip they may have been plotting a “violent act,” as they reportedly headed for Bondi Beach.

    Police said there was no established link with the alleged Bondi gunmen and “no immediate safety risk to the community.”

    A second major Australian gun buyback spurred by a mass shooting

    The new buyback, assuming it is approved by lawmakers next week, will be the largest such government-funded program since 1996, when then-Prime Minister John Howard cracked down on firearms in the wake of another mass shooting, in which 35 people were killed in the town of Port Arthur.

    Just 12 days after that attack, Australian lawmakers approved legislation banning the sale and importation of all automatic and semi-automatic rifles and shotguns; forcing people to present a legitimate reason, and wait 28 days, to buy any firearm, and initiating the massive, mandatory gun-buyback for banned weapons.

    The government confiscated and destroyed nearly 700,000 firearms in the wake of the law’s adoption, reducing the number of gun-owning households by half.

    “It is incontestable that gun-related homicides have fallen quite significantly in Australia,” former premier Howard, who defied many in his own conservative party to usher in the 1996 law, told CBS News’ Seth Doane two decades later, in 2016.

    australia-gun-buyback-getty-158581520.jpg

    A Sept. 8, 1996 file photo shows Norm Legg, a project supervisor with a local security firm, holding an ArmaLite rifle similar to the one used in the Port Arthur mass shooting, which was handed in for scrap in Melbourne as part of a mandatory government gun buyback program after the attack.

    WILLIAM WEST/AFP/Getty


    In the 15 years before those laws were passed, there were 13 mass shootings in Australia. In the two decades after, there wasn’t a single one. Gun homicides overall decreased by nearly 60% in the same period.

    Asked to respond to critics who said the fall in gun deaths did not necessarily happen because of the legislation, Howard told CBS News: “The number of deaths from mass shootings, gun-related homicide has fallen, gun related suicide has fallen … Isn’t that evidence? Or are we expected to believe that that was all magically going to happen? Come on!”

    A study published earlier this year, however, found Australia still has some way to go to fully implement the 2016 legislation, called the National Firearms Agreement. The paper, by the Australia Institute think tank, said some of the measures had yet to be brought into force 29 years later, and others were being inconsistently enforced across different states.

    The law “was ambitious, politically brave, and necessary for public safety,” the report concluded, lauding Howard’s will to defy his fellow lawmakers.

    But “Australia still allows minors to hold firearm licenses, still lacks a National Firearms Register, and still has inconsistent laws that make enforcement difficult,” the group said, adding that overall gun ownership across the country had actually boomed over the last three decades.

    “There are now over four million registered privately owned guns in Australia: 800,000 more than before the (1996) buyback,” the institute said in its May report. “Australians needs gun laws that live up to the Howard Government’s bravery, and right now Australia does not have them.”

    Albanese, along with state and territorial leaders, agreed on Monday to look at ways to bolster gun laws, including by accelerating the launch of the national firearms register called for in the 1996 legislation, making gun licenses available only to Australian citizens, and imposing new restrictions the types of weapons that are legal for licensees to own.

    A memorial at sea, and a day of reflection planned for Bondi Beach victims

    Hundreds of people plunged into the ocean at Bondi Beach on Friday to honor the 15 people killed in the terror attack, forming a massive ring in the sea on surf and paddle boards, as Albanese announced a national day of reflection to be observed on Sunday.

    Albanese urged Australians to light candles at 6:47 p.m. on Sunday, “exactly one week since the attack unfolded.”

    Australia Shooting Beachgoers

    Surfers and swimmers paddle out into the ocean to hold a tribute for the victims of the terror attack at Bondi Beach, in Sydney, Australia, Dec. 19, 2025.

    Steve Markham/AP


    On Friday, swimmers and surfers paddled into a circle, bobbing in the gentle morning swell, splashing water and roaring with emotion.

    “They slaughtered innocent victims, and today I’m swimming out there and being part of my community again to bring back the light,” security consultant Jason Carr, 53, told AFP. “We’re still burying bodies. But I just felt it was important.”

    Carole Schlessinger, a 58-year-old chief executive of a children’s charity, said there was a “beautiful energy” at the ocean gathering. “To be together is such an important way of trying to deal with what’s going on.”

    “It was really lovely to be part of it,” she said, adding: “I personally am feeling very numb. I’m feeling super angry. I’m feeling furious.”

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  • No Evidence Alleged Bondi Gunmen Received Military Training in the Philippines, Says Security Adviser

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    MANILA, Dec 17 (Reuters) – There is no evidence indicating ‌that ​the two suspects involved in ‌the Bondi Beach attack received any form of military training ​while in the Philippines, the Philippines’ National Security Adviser said on Wednesday.   

    In a statement, Eduardo Año ‍said that a mere visit ​to the country does not substantiate allegations of terrorist training, and the duration ​of their ⁠stay would not have permitted any meaningful or structured training.

    The alleged father-and-son gunmen opened fire on a Hanukkah celebration at Sydney’s Bondi Beach on Sunday, killing 15 in an attack that shocked Australia and heightened fears of antisemitism and violent extremism.

    Año said the ‌government was investigating the two men’s travel from November 1 to 28 and coordinating ​with ‌Australian authorities to determine ‍the purpose ⁠of the visit, dismissing media reports portraying the southern Philippines as a hotspot for violent extremism as “outdated” and “misleading”.

    Immigration records show the pair landed in Manila and travelled to Davao City in Mindanao, a region long-plagued by Islamist militancy, before the attack that Australian police say appeared to have been inspired by Islamic State.

    The men stayed mostly in their rooms for almost a ​month at a budget hotel in Davao, MindaNews reported. 

    The father and son checked in at noon on November 1 and rarely went out for more than an hour, a hotel staffer told the online news outlet, which is based in Mindanao.  Hotel staff said the two kept to themselves, never spoke to other guests, or had visitors. They were only seen walking nearby and never taking rides or getting picked up in front of the hotel.

    Reuters could not immediately verify the report. Calls to a hotel officer and Davao police went unanswered.

    Since ​the 2017 Marawi siege, a five-month battle in which the Islamic State-inspired Maute group seized the southern city and fought government forces, Philippine troops have significantly degraded ISIS-affiliated groups, Año said.

    “The remnants of these groups have been fragmented, ​deprived of leadership, and operationally degraded,” he added.

    (Reporting by Karen Lema; Editing by David Stanway and Sharon Singleton)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Australian leader says Bondi Beach suspects

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    Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Tuesday that the father and son suspects in the antisemitic terror attack on a Hanukkah gathering on Bondi Beach were inspired by ISIS, as officials in India confirmed that the older man was originally from that nation.

    Authorities also revealed that gunmen had recently returned from the Philippines, where they traveled to an area known as a hotbed for terrorist groups.

    The mass shooting on the famous beach left 15 innocent people dead, including a 10-year-old girl and an Holocaust survivor. The attack was “motivated by Islamic State ideology,” Albanese said Tuesday as he visited one of the heroes who tried to stop the attackers.

    Australia’s federal police commissioner Krissy Barrett also said Tuesday that it was “a terrorist attack inspired by Islamic State,” referring to the now disparate group that, for several years, held a huge swathe of territory spanning the Syria-Iraq border.

    The suspects, a father and son aged 50 and 24, used guns that were owned legally by the older man, whom officials in New South Wales state have named as Sajid Akram. He was shot dead at the scene, and his son was still being treated in a hospital on Tuesday, where Australian public broadcaster ABC said he had regained consciousness.

    Indian police confirm father was from Hyderabad

    Police in the southern Indian state of Telangana confirmed in a statement on Tuesday that Sajid Akram was originally from the city of Hyderabad. In a statement, the police said he earned a degree in Hyderabad before migrating to Australia in November 1998, where he married a woman of European origin.

    Sajid Akram held an Indian passport, while his son Naveed and a daughter were both born in Australia and are citizens of the country, the police said, confirming previous statements by Australian officials about the son’s nationality. U.S. officials had told CBS News soon after the attack that at least one of the Akrams was believed to be a Pakistani national, but that appears to have been a case of mistaken identity, and a man with the same name as the younger suspect has come forward in Sydney to say he was wrongly identified.

    The Telangana police said the elder Akram had “limited contact with his family in Hyderabad over the past 27 years,” visiting six times since he migrated to Australia, “primarily for family-related reasons.”

    The police statement said family members in India had “expressed no knowledge of his radical mindset or activities, nor of the circumstances that led to his radicalization, and that the son’s apparent radicalization appeared “to have no connection with India.”

    Australian officials have confirmed that homemade ISIS flags were found — along with an improvised explosive device — in the suspects’ vehicle at Bondi Beach on Sunday, and police provided new information on Tuesday about their recent movements.

    Suspected gunmen spent most of November in the Philippines

    Both men traveled to the Philippines in November, New South Wales Police Commissioner Mal Lanyon told reporters on Tuesday, adding that investigators were still looking into the reasons for the trip and where exactly the men went.

    The Philippines Bureau of Immigration said both Sajid Akram and his son, identified widely by Australian media as Naveed Akram, spent most of November — from the 1st until the 28th — in the Philippines, and listing the city of Davao as their final destination.  

    Muslim separatists, including the Islamist Abu Sayyaf group that once publicly backed ISIS, are active in that part of the southern Philippines. ABC, the Australian public broadcaster, said the men had undergone “military-style training” in the Philippines, citing security sources.

    That group and others in the region have drawn and trained some foreign militants from across Asia, the Middle East and Europe in the past, according to the Associated Press, though Abu Sayyaf has been weakened in recent years by repeated military offensives.

    The AP cited Philippine military and police officials as saying there has been no recent indication of any foreign militants operating in the south of the country.

    Did Australian officials fail the Jewish community?

    Australian officials confirmed Monday that Naveed Akram was under investigation for about six months during 2019 for suspected links to a Sydney-based terror cell, though the nation’s primary spy agency found he represented no threat, and officials said the probe had focused on associates.

    Australia’s ABC network reported that his ties included “longstanding links” to members of a pro-ISIS cell in Australia, including contact with alleged jihadist spiritual leader Wisam Haddad and a man named Youssef Uweinat, who was convicted of recruiting young people in Australia to Islamic extremism.

    A lawyer for Haddad has denied that the cleric had “any knowledge of or involvement in the shootings that took place at Bondi Beach,” according to the network.

    Many people, from the daughter of one of the victims, to a former Australian leader, have told CBS News the men’s history should have raised serious red flags, if not stopped them before they claimed so many lives.

    Israeli officials have harshly criticized Australia’s government for failing to protect Jewish people amid a sharp rise in recent years of antisemitic incidents.

    Police set up a cordon at the scene of a mass shooting at Bondi Beach, Dec. 14, 2025 in Sydney, Australia.

    George Chan/Getty


    “We are now facing here a surge of antisemitism, and Australians of Jewish faith are not feeling secure in their own country, and this is insane,” Israeli Ambassador to Australia Amir Maimon told CBS News on Tuesday, urging Australian leaders to create opportunities for young people of different faiths to come together, “and not once a year, but on a weekly basis.”

    Maimon also said “boundaries should be set” by Australian authorities, referring to pro-Palestinian demonstrations that have been held in the country.

    “I believe that it’s very important to make sure that while the principle of freedom of expression should be kept, there should be also a limit to the language that some protesters, and in some protests, we hear,” he said. “I always believe that there is room to do more. Always. I’m asking myself every day, ‘what can I do better? How can I do better?’ And I’m trying to do it. And I do expect the Australian government to do better.”

    Former Australian leader says there are no easy answers

    Former Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull told CBS News on Tuesday that the national government undoubtedly had some very big questions to answer, but he stressed that intelligence gathering — for all nations — is an imperfect science.

    “This type of terrorism has been, the elements of that, have been present in Australia for a long time, and our agencies spend a lot of time keeping an eye on them, but it’s hard to track every single person,” said Turnbull, who was Australian prime minister from 2015 to 2018.

    “Certainly, it’s a very big question: Why does somebody living in the suburbs of Sydney need six long arms, as he [Sajid Akram] had, even though they were licensed? Second question is, why were they licensed to a man who had a son who had been on an ASIO [Australian Security Intelligence Organization] watchlist because of links to ISIS-related entities?  … And that trip to the Philippines raises another question: Why were they there? And so, you know, this gets back to the problem that I think we face all around the world, is databases talking to each other? Are we actually putting all the dots together in time?”

    2017-07-29t235608z-1392997468-rc1f169e8e00-rtrmadp-3-australia-security-raids.jpg

    Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull speaks during a news conference in Sydney, Australia, in a July 30, 2017 file photo. 

    AAP/Sam Mooy/via Reuters


    “There are holes in everybody’s intelligence gathering,” Turnbull said. “But as you know, the terrorist only has to be right once. The security agencies have to be right every time.”

    Regarding the sharp criticism levelled by many in the Jewish community, in particular, over perceived failings in detecting the threat posed by the suspects, and also in sufficiently protecting the pre-planned Jewish event on Bondi Beach, Turnbull said he wasn’t sure how much more could have been done by his successor Albanese.

    “I’ve been prime minister, right? And I’m on the opposite side of politics, so I’m not trying to be partisan about this, but I struggle to see what he could have done that was different. I mean there have been people saying he shouldn’t have allowed pro-Palestine marches. Well, you know, we do have freedom of assembly and freedom of speech in Australia. I mean we have restrictions in Australia on speech, on hate speech, and on guns, in particular.”

    “When I ask people, they will say he should have condemned antisemitism more often. Well, I’ve never heard him do anything other than condemn it, but my question really is to say, what would difference would that have made? To those terrorists, you know, they’re not going to listen to a lecture on the evils of antisemitism from you or me or Anthony Albanese.”

    “Remember, terrorism is a political act, right? So, you’ve got to try to interrupt people being radicalized, particularly young men, it’s the most vulnerable group, and that involves monitoring what is being said online, what they’re being taught, you know, in schools or in mosques or in other places. And the intelligence agencies are doing that all the time,” he said. 

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  • Antisemitism Allowed to Fester in Australia, Says Daughter of Wounded Holocaust Survivor

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    By Christine Chen and Tom Bateman

    SYDNEY, Dec 16 (Reuters) – Government authorities have not ‌done ​enough to stamp out hatred of Jews ‌in Australia, which has allowed it to fester in the aftermath of October 7, said ​the daughter of a Holocaust survivor who was wounded at the Bondi shootings on Sunday.

    Victoria Teplitsky, 53, a retired childcare centre owner, said that ‍the father and son who allegedly went ​on a 10-minute shooting spree that killed 15 people had been “taught to hate,” which was a bigger factor in the attack than access ​to guns.

    “It’s not ⁠the fact that those two people had a gun. It’s the fact that hatred has been allowed to fester against the Jewish minority in Australia,” she told Reuters in an interview.

    “We are angry at our government because it comes from the top, and they should have stood up for our community with strength. And they should have squashed the hatred rather than kind of ‌letting it slide,” she said.

    “We’ve been ignored. We feel like, are we not Australian enough? Do we not matter to ​our ‌government?”

    The attackers fired upon hundreds of ‍people at a Jewish ⁠festival during a roughly 10-minute killing spree, forcing people to flee and take shelter before both were shot by police.

    RISING ANTISEMITIC ATTACKS

    Antisemitic incidents have been rising in Australia since the war in Gaza erupted after Palestinian militant group Hamas killed 1,200 Israelis in an attack on October 7, 2023. Israel’s bombardment of Gaza has since killed over 70,000 people, according to the enclave’s health ministry.

    A rise in such incidents in the past sixteen months prompted the head of the nation’s main intelligence agency to declare that antisemitism was his top priority in terms of threat.

    “This ​was not a surprise to the Jewish community. We warned the government of this many, many times over,” Teplitsky said.

    “We’ve had synagogues that have been graffitied, graffiti everywhere, and we’ve had synagogues that have been bombed,” she added, referring to a 2024 arson attack in Melbourne in which no one was killed.

    Teplitsky’s father Semyon, 86, bled heavily after being shot in the leg, and now is facing several operations as doctors piece bone back together with cement, then remove the cement from the leg, which he still may lose, she said.

    “He’s in good spirits, but he’s also very angry. Angry that this happened, that this was allowed to happen in Australia, the country that he took his children to, to be safe, to be away from antisemitism, to be away from Jew hatred.”

    Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin ​Netanyahu said on Monday that Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese “did nothing” to curb antisemitism.

    Albanese repeated on Tuesday Australia’s support for a two-state solution. Pro-Palestinian protests have been common in Australia since Israel launched its offensive.

    At a press briefing on Monday, Albanese read through a list of actions his government had taken, including criminalising hate speech and incitement to violence ​and a ban on the Nazi salute. He also pledged to extend funding for physical security for Jewish community groups.

    (Writing by Melanie Burton; Editing by Saad Sayeed)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

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  • Mass Shooting at Jewish Event on Bondi Beach Follows Rising Antisemitism in Australia

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    Worldwide, Australia and Italy experienced the biggest increase in antisemitic attacks in 2024, according to Uriya Shavit, who oversees an annual report about global antisemitism from Tel Aviv University.

    The numbers in these two countries rose while worldwide there was a slight decline in antisemitic attacks. Australia recorded 1,713 antisemitic incidents.

    Australia, a country of 28 million people, is home to about 117,000 Jews, according to official figures.

    “This was really one of the safest communities for Jews in history, characterized by religious tolerance and coexistence, and now Australian Jews are seriously asking whether they have a future in the country,” said Shavit. He cited an increasing legitimization of expressions of hatred toward Jews in the public discourse and the government’s lack of willingness to address the issue.

    Rabbi Eli Schlanger, with Chabad of Bondi and a key organizer of the event where Sunday’s shooting happened, was among the dead, according to Chabad, an international movement of ultra-Orthodox Judaism known for its public candle lightings in communities across the world.

    The Executive Council of Australian Jewry, in a statement, called for government leaders to move beyond words.

    “The time for talking is over. We need decisive leadership and action now to eradicate the scourge of antisemitism from Australia’s public life, for which the Jewish community has long been advocating. Government’s first duty is to keep its citizens safe,” the statement said.

    Antisemitic episodes in Australia’s two biggest cities, Sydney and Melbourne — home to 85% of the country’s Jewish population — have drawn the highest profile because they’re severe, unusual and public.

    In August, Albanese accused Iran of organizing two antisemitic attacks in Australia and said his country was cutting off diplomatic relations with Tehran in response. It was not immediately clear if Sunday’s attack on the Hanukkah event had any connection to Iran.

    The Australian Security Intelligence Organization concluded that Iran had directed arson attacks on the Lewis Continental Kitchen, a kosher food company in Sydney, in October 2024, and on Melbourne’s Adass Israel Synagogue two months later, Albanese said.

    Sunday’s shooting erupted during a ceremony marking the first night of the eight-day holiday of Hanukkah, which began this year on Dec. 14. In Hebrew, Hanukkah means “dedication,” and the holiday marks the rededication of the Temple in Jerusalem in the second century B.C. Traditionally, Jews light a ritual candelabra, or menorah, each night, in honor of the tiny supply of ritually pure oil that they found in the temple that lasted for eight nights instead of just one.

    Chabad has often held a public candle lighting on Bondi Beach for Hanukkah that drew hundreds of people in past years. During Hanukkah, Chabad leaders traditionally place menorahs on car rooftops and host giant menorahs in public settings.

    Chabad is a sect of Judaism, originally based in Brooklyn, New York, which focuses on expanding Jewish observance through dispatching emissaries throughout the world, often in places with little or no Jewish presence. Chabad spokesperson Motti Seligson said there are Chabad synagogues and outreach programs in more than 100 countries and Chabad has been in Australia for decades.

    Husband-and-wife emissaries, known as shluchim, work around the world, especially in areas with a sparse Jewish presence. They are easily recognizable by the traditional dress, including black suits and hats for men and modest dress with head coverings or wigs for women.

    There have been several attacks against Chabad rabbis and synagogues around the world. In 2008, nine people were killed in an attack against a Chabad house in Mumbai, India, and one person was killed and three injured in a 2019 shooting at a Chabad synagogue outside of San Diego.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – December 2025

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  • Opinion | Israel Proves the Danger of an ‘Independent’ Justice System

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    The Supreme Court could be enabling a criminal conspiracy to prosecute IDF reservists unjustly.

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    Avi Bell

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  • Thousands of Orthodox Jews Rally in New York to Protest Change in Israel’s Military Draft Rules

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    NEW YORK (AP) — Thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jews packed the streets and sidewalks for blocks around the Israeli consulate in New York City on Sunday to protest issues including a potential end of an exemption for religious students from compulsory service in Israel’s military.

    The protest at the consulate, a block from the United Nations campus in Manhattan, illustrated the complex relationship between Israel and segments of the large population of very religious Jews in New York and its suburbs.

    The two influential, and often rival, grand rebbes of the Satmar community both called on adherents to participate in the demonstration. The Central Rabbinical Congress of the U.S.A. and Canada, a consortium of Orthodox Jewish groups, said it helped organize the protest.

    It comes after Israel’s Supreme Court last year ordered the government to begin drafting ultra-Orthodox Jewish men into the military. There had been a longstanding enlistment exemption — dating to the founding of Israel in 1948.

    The ultra-Orthodox worry that mandatory enlistment will impact adherents’ ties to their faith. But many Jewish Israelis have argued that an exemption is unfair. Rifts over the issue have deepened since the start of the war in Gaza.

    Rabbi Moishe Indig, a Satmar community leader, said he’s not sure organizers expected so many people to show up but he said he felt urgency building around the issue.

    He said he was appreciative of the governments in New York and the U.S. “for giving us the freedom and liberty to be able to live free and have our children go to school and study and learn the Torah.”

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

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  • Learn About Diwali, the Festival of Lights

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    It is celebrated across faiths by more than a billion people in the world’s most populous nation and the diaspora. Over five days, people take part in festive gatherings, fireworks displays, feasts and prayer.

    Diwali is derived from the word “Deepavali,” which means “a row of lights.” Celebrants light rows of traditional clay oil lamps outside their homes to symbolize the victory of light over darkness and knowledge over ignorance.


    Diwali’s date is based on Hindu lunar calendar

    The dates of the festival are based on the Hindu lunar calendar, typically falling in late October or early November.

    This year, the holiday is being celebrated on Oct. 20.


    Diwali’s underlying theme

    While Diwali is a major religious festival for Hindus, it is also observed by Sikhs, Jains and Buddhists. The origin story of Diwali varies depending on the region. All these stories have one underlying theme — the victory of good over evil.

    In southern India, Diwali celebrates the victory of Lord Krishna’s destruction of the demon Naraka who is said to have imprisoned women and tormented his subjects. In northern India, Diwali honors the triumphant return of Lord Rama, his wife Sita, and brother Lakshmana, from a 14-year exile in the forest.


    The celebrations feature lights, fireworks, feasting

    The festival brings with it a number of unique traditions, which also vary by the region. What all celebrations have in common are the lights, fireworks, feasting, new clothes and praying.

    —In southern India, many have an early morning warm oil bath to symbolize bathing in the holy River Ganges as a form of physical and spiritual purification.

    —In the north, worshipping the Goddess Lakshmi, who symbolizes wealth and prosperity, is the norm.

    Gambling is a popular tradition because of the belief whoever gambled on Diwali night would prosper throughout the year. Many people buy gold on the first day of Diwali, known as Dhanteras — an act they believe will bring them good luck.

    Setting off firecrackers is a cherished tradition, as is exchanging sweets and gifts among friends and family. Diwali celebrations typically feature rangoli, which are geometric, floral patterns drawn on the floor using colorful powders. While several northern states had instituted partial or total bans to combat rising air pollution levels during the festival, India’s Supreme Court recently ruled allowing the sale of “green fireworks” believed to be less polluting.


    Some other faiths have their own Diwali stories

    Buddhists, Jains and Sikhs have their own Diwali stories:

    —Jains observe Diwali as the day the Lord Mahavira, the last of the great teachers, attained nirvana, which is liberation from the cycle of birth, death and rebirth.

    —Sikhs celebrate Bandi Chhor Divas — a day that overlaps with Diwali — to commemorate the release of Guru Hargobind, a revered figure in the faith, who had been imprisoned by the Mughal emperor Jahangir.

    —Buddhists observe the day as one when the Hindu Emperor Ashoka, who ruled in the third century B.C., converted to Buddhism.


    New in 2025:
    California makes Diwali an official state holiday

    The law, which will go into effect on Jan. 1, would authorize public schools and community colleges to close on Diwali. State employees could elect to take the day off and public school students will get an excused absence to celebrate the holiday. The new law recognizes that Diwali is also celebrated by Sikhs, Jains and Buddhists.

    Pennsylvania was the first U.S. state to make Diwali a statewide holiday in 2024, followed by Connecticut earlier this year. In June 2023, New York City officially declared Diwali as a public school holiday. Several school districts in New Jersey also observe the holiday with a day off.

    Associated Press religion coverage receives support through the AP’s collaboration with The Conversation US, with funding from Lilly Endowment Inc. The AP is solely responsible for this content.

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

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  • UK Synagogue Attacker Claimed Allegiance to Islamic State in Call to Police, Media Reports Say

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    LONDON (Reuters) -The man whose attack on a synagogue in northern England last week resulted in the deaths of two Jewish worshippers phoned police to say he was acting for Islamic State, British media reported on Wednesday.

    Jihad Al-Shamie, a 35-year-old British citizen of Syrian descent, made the call after driving a car into pedestrians and attacking people with a knife the Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation Synagogue in the Crumpsall district, the reports said, citing police.

    (Reporting by Michael Holden; editing by William James)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Sept. 2025

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  • Jews this week will be celebrating Sukkot, a seven-day holiday intended as a time of joy

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    Ultra-Orthodox Jewish children play next to Sukkahs, a temporary structures built for the upcoming Jewish holiday of Sukkot in the Orthodox Jewish neighborhood of Mea Shearim in Jerusalem, Sunday, Oct. 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Ohad Zwigenberg)

    The Associated Press

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  • Manchester synagogue attack victim possibly killed by officer’s gunshot, police say

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    London – One of the two people killed in Thursday’s terrorist attack outside a synagogue in the northern English city of Manchester may have died of a gunshot fired by a police officer, the Greater Manchester Police said Friday. Two Jewish men, identified by police as Adrian Daulby and Melvin Cravitz, were killed and three others were seriously wounded during the attack, which happened on Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Jewish religious calendar.

    Both of the victims were local residents.

    A government pathologist advised the police “that he has provisionally determined that one of the deceased victims would appear to have suffered a wound consistent with a gunshot injury,” Stephen Watson, the Chief Constable of Greater Manchester Police force, said in a statement Friday.

    “It is currently believed that the suspect, Jihad Al Shamie, was not in possession of a firearm,” Watson said. “It follows therefore, that subject to further forensic examination, this injury may sadly have been sustained as a tragic and unforeseen consequence of the urgently required action taken by my officers to bring this vicious attack to an end.”

    The police investigation continues at the scene near Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation synagogue in Crumpsall, Manchester, where two people died in a terror attack, Oct. 3, 2025.

    Peter Byrne/PA Images/Getty


    “We have also been advised by medical professionals that one of the three victims currently receiving treatment in hospital, has also suffered a gunshot wound, which is mercifully not life threatening,” Watson added.

    Police officers shot and killed the suspect, who investigators believed to be 35-year-old Jihad Al-Shamie, a British citizen of Syrian descent, following a vehicle and stabbing attack outside the Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation Synagogue on Thursday morning. 

    Officers were called to the synagogue at about 9.30 a.m. local time (4:30 a.m. ET) by a member of the public who said he’d seen a car being driven toward members of the public.

    The police said Thursday that the attacker drove directly at people outside the synagogue and then attacked people with a knife. The attack happened while a large group of worshippers was inside the synagogue, but the suspect did not manage to enter the building.

    In his statement on Friday, Watson said the only shots fired during the incident were fired by police “as they worked to prevent the offender from entering the synagogue and causing further harm to our Jewish community.”

    The attacker wore a vest that looked like it could contain explosives, but police later confirmed that there were no viable explosives found.

    Manchester synagogue incident

    U.K. Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and Lady Victoria Starmer speak with a police officer during a visit to the Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation synagogue in Crumpsall, Manchester, where two people died in a terrorist attack the previous day, Oct. 3, 2025.

    Peter Byrne/PA Images/Getty


    The police said Thursday night that three other individuals had been arrested “on suspicion of commission, preparation and instigation of acts of terrorism” in connection with the attack, whom the force identified only as “two men in their 30s and a woman in her 60s.”

    U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer visited the scene of the attack Friday with his wife, speaking with police and other officials outside the synagogue. 

    In a social media post on Thursday night, Starmer called the attack “a vile terrorist attack that attacked Jews, because they are Jews.”

    “Antisemitism is a hatred that is rising, once again. Britain must defeat it, once again. To every Jewish person in this country: I promise that I will do everything in my power to guarantee you the security you deserve,” he said.

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  • Stabbing outside synagogue in Manchester, England, as Jews mark holiday of Yom Kippur

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    London — The Greater Manchester Police told CBS News they were “dealing with a stabbing that’s happened outside a synagogue on the street,” in the northern U.K. city on Thursday. The incident comes on the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur.

    The Manchester Evening News, a local newspaper, and CBS News’ partner network BBC News reported that police had said the suspect did not gain access to the building and was shot at the scene by armed officers. It was not immediately clear how many people may have been injured.

    “It’s a serious incident I have to say,” Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham told the BBC. “I would say to people to avoid the area, because it’s a serious incident, but at the same time I can give some reassurance that the immediate danger appears to be over.”

    Emergency services at the scene of an incident at Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation synagogue in Crumpsall, Manchester, England, where police have shot a suspect after several people were reportedly stabbed, Oct. 2, 2025.

    Peter Byrne/PA Images/Getty


    The local ambulance service said in a statement that a major incident had been declared in the area.

    “Following reports of an incident on Middleton Road in Crumpsall, the trust has dispatched resources to the scene,” the ambulance service said. “We are currently assessing the situation and working with other members of the emergency services. Our priority is to ensure people receive the medical help they need as quickly as possible.”

    This breaking news story will be updated.

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  • Tokin’ Jew founders on using comedy and cannabis to build connection and fight antisemitism | amNewYork

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    What started as a meme page has since grown into a full-fledged cannabis brand connected to Judaism.

    Tokin’ Jew was created by Brooklyn residents Will Cohen and Ben Kraim in 2020, with the duo using the Tokin’ Jew name for a meme account on Instagram. What he didn’t expect was how the page would grow into a full cannabis community.

    “There was no kind of intention behind creating this kind of cannabis brand or this intersection of cannabis and Judaism. It was a way of connecting to my Judaism in a little bit of a different way,” said Cohen. “Judaism gets thrown upon you when you’re young, as does all religion, and people want to find their own identity within the religion as they grow up and different life experiences mold them. What we’ve tapped into with Tokin’ Jew is like being able to really find your way in the religion through a different lens, which is through comedy and through culture, and then, obviously, with cannabis as well.”

    “I think a lot of this comes from a happy accident in the beginning and turned into, ‘Whoa, there’s actually something here.’ A lot of it came from the audience,” said Kraim. 

    The brand started with one product that Cohen created: the J Menorah, which holds nine joints. 

    “By no means do I recommend smoking all 9 joints at once, but it’s just a funny way to connect back to my Judaism,” said Cohen. “We rolled out the Instagram and started releasing this product and funny content.”

    Tokin’ Jew has since grown into a full-scale cannabis brand, with products leaning into Jewish culture. Among their products, you can find a Menorah Bong, pipes shaped like pickles and dreidels, a joint scroller, and themed grinders. You can also find a selection of edibles called Tokin’ Chews.

    As the Jewish community gears up for the high holidays of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, Tokin’ Jew has launched new products to celebrate, including their “High Honey,” a THC-infused honey and a new Challah pipe. The crew is also gearing up for an infused Shabbat dinner ahead of Rosh Hashanah and more new products on the horizon.

    “We also have some collaborations coming up on the product side as well, with our edibles, we’re gonna be partnering up with a couple of chefs and food icons to do some cool collabs,” said Cohen.

    Tokin’ Jew’s new High Honey and Challah pipe.Photos courtesy of Tokin’ Jew

    Finding common ground with ritualistic practices

    Both Cohen and Kraim agree that the connection between cannabis and Judaism is deeper than expected, with both cultures being bridged through rituals. Much like Judaism, Cohen and Kraim noted that cannabis has rituals that they can poke fun at with their products.

    “This is kind of all religions, but cannabis is so ritualistic. There’s so many rituals as part of it, right? You pass to the left, you can’t have a white lighter, you do it at a certain time, you love your certain bong,” said Kraim. “I think Judaism, at least the way I grew up, was very reform, very traditional, like that’s what was passed down. It wasn’t like deep historical texts that were like so important to me. It was having family dinner or your cousins go on a walk before family dinner and smoke a joint. It’s like these traditions get passed down, so there’s just like a deep association between those things.”

    Many of Tokin’ Jew’s products poke fun at Jewish foods, something that they acknowledge has deep meaning for Jewish culture as well.

    “Food is so deeply a part of Jewish culture, and it ain’t nothing that makes food better than a little cannabis. I think there’s this element too, from like a mental health perspective of just like generational trauma and cannabis is just known to kind of ease anxiety and just chill people out. I think that Jews definitely use it as a tool for that,” said Kraim.

    Fighting antisemitism with comedy

    From the beginning, comedy was at the forefront of Tokin’ Jew. 

    “Jews have furiously used comedy to just deal with whatever. I think that cannabis and comedy and just laughter go hand in hand, it brings people together,” said Kraim.

    For Cohen and Kraim, the comedy is important for building a community and combating antisemitism. 

    “It’s interesting that the pushback comes. It can come from internal to the Jewish religion, or it can come from ultra orthodox people who see a shofar pipe and they’re like, ‘I can’t believe I see this on my screen’ to then people outside,” said Cohen. “There’s always people who hide behind a keyboard and spread hate and that’s what happens in our DMs, that’s what happens in our comment section.”

    While speaking to amNewYork, Cohen noted that cannabis is already connected to Judaism and comedy, particularly through comedians like Seth Rogen and Chelsea Handler. Through Tokin’ Jew, Cohen and Kraim are trying to help shift the perspective by bringing some levity to Judaism.

    Tokin' Jew promotional images.
    Tokin’ Jew promotional images.Photos courtesy of Tokin’ Jew

    “We’re trying to spread this message of being proud to be Jewish through a little bit of a different lens. When you’re scrolling on Instagram and you see a rabbi, and your stereotypes of a rabbi are like thinking all the bad things about Jews that the media has maybe taught you, and then you see them rip a bong,” said Cohen. “Now your perspective on Jews has just slightly shifted. We’re humanizing Jews by cutting it with weed.”

    “We just want people to smile and just have a good time because life is hard. But in the world of like Jew hate, we’ve gotten a lot of comments where it’s just like, ‘Whoa, this has got me curious, I have questions about Judaism,’ and you could just see them opening up a little bit,” said Kraim. 

    The community that Tokin’ Jew has built has also brought out people within the Jewish community who were looking to reconnect with their culture.

    “We’ve gotten thousands of messages from Jews all over the world who [say], ‘I disconnected from my Judaism as soon as I moved out of my parents’ house where I was never connected to Judaism’ and ‘Current events have made me want to connect more with other Jews, and I didn’t really know where I belonged or fit in, and then I came across Tokin’ Jew, and it basically just innately screamed Jews who are chill and light and like me,’” said Kraim. That ultra orthodox rabbi who was mad at us about the shofar pipe would probably hear that and [say], ‘It’s a little unconventional, but you are achieving things that we would like to achieve, which is to bring Jews together.’”

    For more information, visit tokinjew.com.

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  • Australia expels Iranian diplomats, accuses country of directing antisemitic arson attacks

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    Melbourne, Australia — Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese accused Iran of organizing two antisemitic attacks in Australia and said the country was cutting off diplomatic relations with Tehran in response on Tuesday.

    The Australian Security Intelligence Organization concluded the Iranian government had directed arson attacks on the Lewis Continental Kitchen, a kosher food company, in Sydney in October last year and on the Adass Israel Synagogue in Melbourne in December last year, Albanese said.

    Iran’s government denied the allegations.

    There has been a steep rise in antisemitic incidents in Sydney and Melbourne since the Israel-Hamas war began in 2023.

    Australian authorities have previously said they suspect that foreign actors are paying local criminals-for-hire to carry out attacks in the country.

    Police have already arrested at least one suspect in the Sydney cafe fire investigation and two suspects directly accused of torching the Melbourne synagogue.

    Member of Parliament Josh Burns walks past the damaged Adass Israel Synagogue, Dec. 10, 2024, in Melbourne, Australia. An arson attack on the synagogue forced congregants to flee as flames engulfed the building.

    Asanka Ratnayake/Getty


    Sayed Mohammed Moosawi, a 32-year-old Sydney-based former chapter president of the Nomads biker gang, has been charged with directing the fire bombings of the Sydney café as well as the nearby Curly Lewis Brewery. The brewery was apparently confused for the café and mistakenly targeted three days earlier for an antisemitic attack.

    Giovanna Laulu, a 21-year-old man from Melbourne, was charged last month with being one of three masked arsonists who caused extensive damage to the synagogue in December.

    A second alleged arsonist, a 20-year-old man also from Melbourne, is expected to appear in court Wednesday, a police statement said. He has not been publicly named.

    “ASIO has now gathered enough credible intelligence to reach a deeply disturbing conclusion,” Albanese told reporters. “The Iranian government directed at least two of these attacks. Iran has sought to disguise its involvement but ASIO assesses it was behind the attacks.

    “These were extraordinary and dangerous acts of aggression orchestrated by a foreign nation on Australian soil,” he said. “They were attempts to undermine social cohesion and sow discord in our community. It is totally unacceptable.”

    Australia Synagogue Fire

    Debris is strewn at the burnt-out Adass Israel Synagogue in Melbourne, Australia, on Dec. 9, 2024. 

    YUMI ROSENBAUM/AP


    Shortly before the announcement, the Australian government told Iran’s Ambassador to Australia Ahmad Sadeghi that he will be expelled. It also withdrew Australian diplomats posted in Iran to a third country, Albanese said.

    An alert to Australians in Iran noted the embassy’s closure and urged them to “strongly consider leaving as soon as possible, if it is safe to do so.”

    “Foreigners in Iran, including Australians and dual Australian-Iranian nationals, are at a high risk of arbitrary detention or arrest,” the warning read.

    Australia updated its warning to travelers to its highest level: “Do not travel” to Iran.

    Iran has a long history of detaining Westerners or those with ties abroad to use as bargaining chips in negotiations.

    Foreign Minister Penny Wong said that Canberra would keep some diplomatic lines open to Tehran to advance Australia’s interests. She added that it was the first time Australia has expelled an ambassador since World War II.

    Albanese said that Australia will legislate to list Iran’s Revolutionary Guard as a terrorist organization.

    Australia’s law makes providing support to a listed terrorist organization a crime. The government has previously rejected calls to list the Revolutionary Guard under existing terrorism laws because it is a government entity.

    Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard has been accused of carrying out attacks abroad over the decades of its existence, though it broadly denies any involvement. The Guard’s Quds, or Jerusalem, Force is its expeditionary arm and is accused by Western nations of using local militants and criminals in the past to target dissidents and Israelis abroad.

    The U.S., during the first Trump administration in 2019, formally designated the Guard a foreign terrorist organization, accusing it not only facilitating, but perpetrating terrorism. 

    A spokesperson for the Executive Council of Australian Jewry welcomed the terrorist designation for the Revolutionary Guard, adding in a statement that the group was “outraged” that a foreign actor was behind the crimes.

    “Foremost, these were attacks that deliberately targeted Jewish Australians, destroyed a sacred house of worship, caused millions of dollars of damage, and terrified our community,” the statement said.

    Since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza, Israel has arrested several people on charges they had been paid or encouraged by Iran to carry out vandalism and monitor potential targets there.

    Iran denied Australia’s allegations through its Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmail Baghaei, who tried to link it to the challenges Australia faced with Israel after announcing it would recognize a Palestinian state.

    “It looks like the action, which is against Iran, diplomacy and the relations between the two nations, is a compensation for the criticism that the Australians had against the Zionist regime,” Baghaei claimed.

    The move against Iran came a week after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu branded Albanese a “weak politician who had betrayed Israel” by recognizing a Palestinian state.

    Netanyahu’s extraordinary public rebuke on social media came after an Aug. 11 announcement by Albanese that his government’s recognition of a Palestinian state will be formalized at the United Nations General Assembly in September. That announcement was followed by tit-for-tat cancellations of visas for Australian and Israeli officials.

    Albanese previously resisted calls to expel Iran’s envoy to Canberra before, analysts said, including in 2024 when Sadeghi was summoned for meetings with foreign ministry officials over his social media posts.

    Michael Shoebridge, a former Australian defense and security official and director of the think tank Strategic Analysis Australia, said he didn’t believe the move was prompted by Israel’s complaints.

    “I don’t think that’s a matter of Australia-Israel relations, but a matter of community cohesion here in Australia,” he said.

    Neither ASIO director-general Mike Burgess nor Albanese explained what evidence there was of Iranian involvement.

    Burgess said no Iranian diplomats in Australia were involved.

    “This was directed by the IRGC through a series of overseas cut-out facilitators to coordinators that found their way to tasking Australians,” Burgess said.

    While antisemitic incidents increased in Australian after the Israel-Hamas war began on Oct. 7 2023, Iran was responsible for a transition in October last year when the violence more directly targeted people, businesses and places of worship, Burgess said.

    “Iran started the first of those,” Burgess said.

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  • Police data show Chicago’s West Ridge has become a hotbed of anti-Jewish hate crimes

    Police data show Chicago’s West Ridge has become a hotbed of anti-Jewish hate crimes

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    Man charged in West Ridge shooting to face judge


    Man charged in West Ridge shooting to face judge

    02:06

    Anti-Jewish hate crimes rose sharply in Chicago this year, with 70 documented incidents, a 46% increase over last year’s high of 48, with two months left to go in 2024.

    According to a CBS News Data Team analysis of Chicago Police hate crimes data, the West Ridge community has recorded a dozen anti-Jewish hate crimes so far this year, including two assaults, a bomb threat, and vandalism to property and a car.


    West Ridge was shaken after a 39-year-old Jewish man was shot in the shoulder on Saturday. The suspect in that shooting, Sidi Mohamed Abdallahi, 22, allegedly opened fire on police and paramedics before being critically shot by police

    Abdallahi was charged with six counts of attempted first-degree murder, seven counts of aggravated discharge of a firearm, and aggravated battery.

    At least one Chicago alderman has called for hate crime charges to be filed. Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling didn’t rule out the possibility of additional charges on Monday, but said the investigation is continuing.

    So far this year, Chicago saw dozens of reported anti-Jewish hate crimes, including 16 criminal defacements, four bomb threats, two incidents of vandalism to institutions, including a place of worship and a school, four incidents of damage to cars, according to an analysis of police data.  


    An audit by the Anti-Defamation League showed an increase in antisemitic incidents in Illinois last year, up 74% from 2022. Earlier this month, an anti-Israel message appeared on a digital billboard in suburban Northbrook.

    The rise in anti-Jewish hate crimes in Chicago preceded the Israeli-Gaza conflict that started after the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks, increasing from eight to 37 incidents in 2022, and again in 2023 with 48 incidents. 

    Chicago police hate crimes data is only readily available going back to 2012.

    Meanwhile, anti-Arab and anti-Muslim crimes also rose last year to 20 incidents, up from eight in 2022. So far this year, there were 11 anti-Arab and anti-Muslim hate crimes confirmed by the police department, including the vandalization of a Palestinian café last Friday.

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